Judging by what he says here, he is clearly in his own world anyway. Up his own ass by quite a distance.
His annual salary is obviously a lot higher than most people's but actually expected it to be more than that to be fair...not that it's deserved or justified anyway, but we all know how this crappy world works.
Never thought I would see Matt Hancock chewing on a penis with Boy George sitting in front of him but there you go!
I wouldn’t class myself as a particular fan of anyone in the show and just watch it for light entertainment. Although I will say that for all the housemates grilling Hancock yesterday, why was nobody grilling Boy George for chaining someone to a radiator and beating them with an iron bar?
Never thought I would see Matt Hancock chewing on a penis with Boy George sitting in front of him but there you go!
I wouldn’t class myself as a particular fan of anyone in the show and just watch it for light entertainment. Although I will say that for all the housemates grilling Hancock yesterday, why was nobody grilling Boy George for chaining someone to a radiator and beating them with an iron bar?
I will say that for all the housemates grilling Hancock yesterday, why was nobody grilling Boy George for chaining someone to a radiator and beating them with an iron bar?
If a certain person is looking for forgiveness then there is a serious enquiry forthcoming. The certain person could be making proper preparation for that enquiry (as well as actually doing their day job). I would suggest that any redemption or 'forgiveness' might come from the conclusions of the enquiry rather than on a light entertainment show.
Why didn't MH say sorry and ask for forgiveness before going in to the jungle? He's had all the time in the world to.
When questioned, he said that he overall did a good job on the pandemic
Then he randomly spills out wanting forgiveness and does sudden victim playing sobbing.
No one wants to be hated and alone, people can empathise with him in that particular situation, myself included, but I personally don't think it was a genuine apology. He was protecting himself.
His sobbing enabled him to stop talking. Maybe continue talking and open up further while still sobbing.
He probably is sorry in at least in some format but as Chris Moyles said, he's very indirect about it.
I've never watched the series up until a few days ago, how nobody has stood over Hancock and resisted the urge to jam their thumbs, up as far as they will go, in his eyes and force some confessions out of him.
In fact that's all I could handle, ill go back to my book
Why didn't MH say sorry and ask for forgiveness before going in to the jungle? He's had all the time in the world to.
When questioned, he said that he overall did a good job on the pandemic
Then he randomly spills out wanting forgiveness and does sudden victim playing sobbing.
No one wants to be hated and alone, people can empathise with him in that particular situation, myself included, but I personally don't think it was a genuine apology. He was protecting himself.
His sobbing enabled him to stop talking. Maybe continue talking and open up further while still sobbing.
He probably is sorry in at least in some format but as Chris Moyles said, he's very indirect about it.
A good job, at the beginning of the pandemic, they said a good job would have been 20k deaths. Remember he also said he was going into the jungle to raise the awareness of dyslexia. I think he meant amnesia, as he hasn’t mentioned it once.
Why didn't MH say sorry and ask for forgiveness before going in to the jungle? He's had all the time in the world to.
When questioned, he said that he overall did a good job on the pandemic
Then he randomly spills out wanting forgiveness and does sudden victim playing sobbing.
No one wants to be hated and alone, people can empathise with him in that particular situation, myself included, but I personally don't think it was a genuine apology. He was protecting himself.
His sobbing enabled him to stop talking. Maybe continue talking and open up further while still sobbing.
He probably is sorry in at least in some format but as Chris Moyles said, he's very indirect about it.
A good job, at the beginning of the pandemic, they said a good job would have been 20k deaths. Remember he also said he was going into the jungle to raise the awareness of dyslexia. I think he meant amnesia, as he hasn’t mentioned it once.
Or it hasn’t been shown about dyslexia?
The forgiveness he is looking for is for breaking the guidelines he set by canoodling in a lift with a work colleague which was a slap in the face for everyone abiding by the rules.
Did Boy George think that everyone should have been allowed to visit and go in and out of Covid wards as you please so that you could see your relatives being treated ?
I've never watched the series up until a few days ago, how nobody has stood over Hancock and resisted the urge to jam their thumbs, up as far as they will go, in his eyes and force some confessions out of him.
In fact that's all I could handle, ill go back to my book
Haven't seen a lot of it, but the bit i did see the other night they were asking him questions and then decided amongst themselves to drop the subject and move on.
Moyles did say that he felt (probably quite correctly) that Hancock wasn't being entirely truthful though, and was holding stuff back.
With the Covid Inquiry taking place I'm sure Matt Hancock wants to try to deflect from his part in the Government's unlawful decision to send thousands of untested people into care homes, resulting in the unnecessary deaths of thousands of vulnerable people. Far from putting a protective ring around care homes, they did the opposite.
Government policies on discharging untested patients from hospital to care homes in England at the start of the Covid pandemic have been ruled unlawful by the High Court.
The ruling came after two women took Public Health England and the health secretary, then Matt Hancock, to court.
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https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-63481685.amp
Judging by what he says here, he is clearly in his own world anyway. Up his own ass by quite a distance.
His annual salary is obviously a lot higher than most people's but actually expected it to be more than that to be fair...not that it's deserved or justified anyway, but we all know how this crappy world works.
Stranger things have happened.
The odds will be high, but, he is going to have a load of wums and torys voting for him, whatever he says and whatever he does.
I wouldn’t class myself as a particular fan of anyone in the show and just watch it for light entertainment. Although I will say that for all the housemates grilling Hancock yesterday, why was nobody grilling Boy George for chaining someone to a radiator and beating them with an iron bar?
Jill Scott 6/5
Mike Tindall 7/2
Owen Warner 15/2
Mstt Hancock 11/1
There would have been a dignity about this farce if Matt hancock pledged to donate his £400,000 sum to a relatable charity of the Covid crises.
That wouldn't earn forgiveness from some people, but it would at least be on the right pathway and it would show a tad of genuine care.
He wants people to like him and it seems to be working so far....
It could be as little as a few grand.
https://metro.co.uk/2022/11/01/im-a-celebrity-2022-matt-hancock-to-donate-part-of-fee-to-charity-17677485/
I would suggest that any redemption or 'forgiveness' might come from the conclusions of the enquiry rather than on a light entertainment show.
When questioned, he said that he overall did a good job on the pandemic
Then he randomly spills out wanting forgiveness and does sudden victim playing sobbing.
No one wants to be hated and alone, people can empathise with him in that particular situation, myself included, but I personally don't think it was a genuine apology. He was protecting himself.
His sobbing enabled him to stop talking. Maybe continue talking and open up further while still sobbing.
He probably is sorry in at least in some format but as Chris Moyles said, he's very indirect about it.
In fact that's all I could handle, ill go back to my book
Moyles did say that he felt (probably quite correctly) that Hancock wasn't being entirely truthful though, and was holding stuff back.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-61227709
Government policies on discharging untested patients from hospital to care homes in England at the start of the Covid pandemic have been ruled unlawful by the High Court.
The ruling came after two women took Public Health England and the health secretary, then Matt Hancock, to court.